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Tight binding of proteins to membranes from older human cells
Authors:Roger J. W. Truscott  Susana Comte-Walters  Zsolt Ablonczy  John H. Schwacke  Yoke Berry  Anastasia Korlimbinis  Michael G. Friedrich  Kevin L. Schey
Affiliation:(1) Save Sight Institute, Sydney University, Sydney, NSW, 2001, Australia;(2) Department of Pharmacology, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC, USA;(3) Department of Biochemistry, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC, USA;(4) School of Chemistry, University of Wollongong, Wollongong, NSW, 2522, Australia;(5) Mass Spectrometry Research Center, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, USA
Abstract:The lens is an ideal model system for the study of macromolecular aging and its consequences for cellular function, since there is no turnover of lens fibre cells. To examine biochemical processes that take place in the lens and that may also occur in other long-lived cells, membranes were isolated from defined regions of human lenses that are synthesised at different times during life, and assayed for the presence of tightly bound cytosolic proteins using quantitative iTRAQ proteomics technology. A majority of lens beta crystallins and all gamma crystallins became increasingly membrane bound with age, however, the chaperone proteins alpha A and alpha B crystallin, as well as the thermally-stable protein, βB2 crystallin, did not. Other proteins such as brain-associated signal protein 1 and paralemmin 1 became less tightly bound in the older regions of the lens. It is evident that protein–membrane interactions change significantly with age. Selected proteins that were formerly cytosolic become increasingly tightly bound to cell membranes with age and are not removed even by treatment with 7 M urea. It is likely that such processes reflect polypeptide denaturation over time and the untoward binding of proteins to membranes may alter membrane properties and contribute to impairment of communication between older cells.
Keywords:Human lens   Aging   Protein denaturation   Membrane binding   Lens barrier
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